Muscat Daily

India’s endangered lion prides conquer disease

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Gir National Park, India - Three years after a deadly virus struck India’s endangered Asiatic lions in their last remaining natural habitat, conservati­onists are hunting for new homes to help booming prides roam free.

The majestic big cats, slightly smaller than their African cousins and with a fold of skin along their bellies, were once found widely across southwest Asia.

Hunting and human encroachme­nt saw the population plunge to just 20 by 1913, and the lions are now found only in a wildlife sanctuary in India’s western Gujarat state.

Following years of concerted government efforts, the lion population in Gir National Park has swelled to nearly 700, according to an official census last year.

But just three years ago, the conservati­on success looked to be in danger when several lions started to die in one part of the 1,400sqkm forest.

The canine distemper virus - a highly infectious disease - was detected among dozens of the royal beasts, killing at least 11 of them.

“We picked all the lions from the area and isolated them,” Dushyant Vasavada, the park’s chief conservato­r of forests, said.

Authoritie­s imported special vaccines from overseas and each animal was given three doses each, followed by a booster shot.

Cattle and dogs living near the park were also inoculated as suspected carriers of the virus.

“We vaccinated the lions in captivity and successful­ly controlled the disease and no new outbreak has been observed,” Vasavada said, adding that park rangers were still closely monitoring their health.

‘Very thrilling experience’

Lions are a source of pride for India, particular­ly in Gujarat’s Saurashtra region, where man and beast coexist.

A cattle-rearing tribe lives among the animals in the sanctuary, and it is not uncommon to see a pride of lions crossing a highway in the region as motorists wait and watch.

The king of the jungle is also a major tourist attraction, along with leopards, panthers and other big cats found in the sanctuary.

Around 550,000 people visit the park each year, riding in opentop jeeps as they try to spot the predators prowling among pale yellow deciduous trees.

“It is a very thrilling experience to see the lions from close in the wild,” said forest guide Dinesh Sadiya.

But the 2018 virus outbreak was a reminder that the steady growth in the animal's population cannot be taken for granted.

The lions have low genetic diversity due to their small population size, making them more vulnerable to epidemics.

A 1993 outbreak of canine distemper virus in Tanzania’s Serengeti National Park killed a third of its 3,000 lions.

Wildlife biologist Ravi Chellam said that outbreak underscore­d the need to move a few prides to other sites nearby.

“Translocat­ion is a risk mitigation strategy akin to us getting health or life insurance,” he said.

“If something happens to the population in Gir, there is always going to be an additional freerangin­g population of wild lions available.”

Chellam said the sanctuary was now too small for its steadily growing lion population.

 ?? (AFP) ?? This file photo shows Asiatic lions at the Gir National Park and Sanctuary at Sasan Gir, about 330km from Ahmedabad, the largest city in the western Indian state of Gujarat, on January 5 this year
(AFP) This file photo shows Asiatic lions at the Gir National Park and Sanctuary at Sasan Gir, about 330km from Ahmedabad, the largest city in the western Indian state of Gujarat, on January 5 this year

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